42,166 research outputs found
Flight craft Patent
Designing spacecraft for flight into space, atmospheric reentry, and landing at selected site
Mixed Meson Masses with Domain-Wall Valence and Staggered Sea Fermions
Mixed action lattice calculations allow for an additive lattice spacing
dependent mass renormalization of mesons composed of one sea and one valence
quark, regardless of the type of fermion discretization methods used in the
valence and sea sectors. The value of the mass renormalization depends upon the
lattice actions used. This mixed meson mass shift is an important lattice
artifact to determine for mixed action calculations; because it modifies the
pion mass, it plays a central role in the low energy dynamics of all hadronic
correlation functions. We determine the leading order, , and
next to leading order, , additive mass shift of
\textit{valence-sea} mesons for a mixed lattice action with domain-wall valence
fermions and rooted staggered sea fermions, relevant to the majority of current
large scale mixed action lattice efforts. We find that on the asqtad improved
coarse MILC lattices, this additive mass shift is well parameterized in lattice
units by , which in physical
units, using fm, corresponds to . In terms of the mixed action effective field
theory parameters, the corresponding mass shift is given by at leading order plus
next-to-leading order corrections including the necessary chiral logarithms for
this mixed action calculation, determined in this work. Within the precision of
our calculation, one can not distinguish between the full next-to-leading order
effective field theory analysis of this additive mixed meson mass shift and the
parameterization given above.Comment: 28 pages, 3 figures, 5 table
The nucleon to Delta electromagnetic transition form factors in lattice QCD
The electromagnetic nucleon to Delta transition form factors are evaluated
using two degenerate flavors of dynamical Wilson fermions and using dynamical
sea staggered fermions with domain wall valence quarks. The two subdominant
quadrupole form factors are evaluated for the first time in full QCD to
sufficient accuracy to exclude a zero value, which is taken as a signal for
deformation in the nucleon-Delta system. For the Coulomb quadrupole form factor
the unquenched results show deviations from the quenched results at low q^2
bringing dynamical lattice results closer to experiment, thereby confirming the
importance of pion cloud contributions on this quantity.Comment: 15 pages, 8 Figure
High-Dimensional Graphical Model Search with the gRapHD R Package
This paper presents the R package gRapHD for efficient selection of high-dimensional undirected graphical models. The package provides tools for selecting trees, forests, and decomposable models minimizing information criteria such as AIC or BIC, and for displaying the independence graphs of the models. It has also some useful tools for analysing graphical structures. It supports the use of discrete, continuous, or both types of variables.
An investigation into grid patching techniques
In the past decade significant advances were made using flow field methods in the calculation of external transonic flows over aerodynamic configurations. It is now possible to calculate inviscid transonic flow over three dimensional configurations by solving the potential equation. However, with the exception of the transonic small disturbance methods which have the advantage of a simple cartesian grid, the configurations over which it is possible to calculate such flows are relatively simple. The major reason for this is the difficulty of producing compatibility between grid generation and flow equation solutions. The main programs in use, use essentially analytic transformations for prescribed configurations and, as such, are not easy to extend. While there is work in progress to extend this type of system to a limited extent, the long term effort is directed towards a more general approach. This approach should not be restricted to producing grid systems in isolation but rather a consideration of the overall problem of flow field solution
VLBA Polarization Observations of Markarian 421 After a Gamma-Ray High State
We present four high dynamic range, dual-circular polarization, Very Long
Baseline Array (VLBA) observations at 22 GHz of Markarian 421, taken throughout
the year following the source's unprecedented gamma-ray high state in early
2001. These four new VLBA observations are combined with data from our earlier
1999 paper and archival VLBA data-sets that have become available since 1999 to
produce a combined 28 epoch VLBA data-set on Mrk 421 spanning the years 1994 to
2002. No new component associated with the 2001 flares was seen on the total
intensity images, but the combined data-set allowed precise measurements of the
apparent speeds of the existing components. The peak measured apparent speed
was for component C5, which has an apparent speed of 0.1 +/- 0.02 c (H_0=71 km
s^{-1} Mpc^{-1}, Omega_m=0.27, and Omega_Lambda=0.73). No counterjet is seen
with a limit on the jet to counterjet brightness ratio J >~ 100. These observed
VLBI properties of Markarian 421 are consistent with a jet with a bulk Lorentz
factor of about 2 and an angle to the line-of-sight of about 1 degree,
suggesting a jet that decelerates between the gamma-ray producing region and
the parsec scale. The VLBI core and inner jet (component C7) have fractional
polarizations of about 5%, and an electric vector position angle (EVPA) aligned
with the jet axis. Component C5 (at 1.5 mas from the core) has a higher
fractional polarization of about 15%, and an EVPA nearly orthogonal to the jet
axis. Significant variability is detected in the EVPA of component C6, which at
two of the four epochs shows an EVPA aligned with the jet axis, possibly a sign
of propagating disturbances that are only visible on the polarization images.
If these propagating disturbances are linked to the 2001 gamma-ray high state,
then their inferred apparent speed is between 1 and 3 c.Comment: 11 pages, accepted to Ap
Resistive flow in a weakly interacting Bose-Einstein condensate
We report the direct observation of resistive flow through a weak link in a
weakly interacting atomic Bose-Einstein condensate. Two weak links separate our
ring-shaped superfluid atomtronic circuit into two distinct regions, a source
and a drain. Motion of these weak links allows for creation of controlled flow
between the source and the drain. At a critical value of the weak link
velocity, we observe a transition from superfluid flow to superfluid plus
resistive flow. Working in the hydrodynamic limit, we observe a conductivity
that is 4 orders of magnitude larger than previously reported conductivities
for a Bose-Einstein condensate with a tunnel junction. Good agreement with
zero-temperature Gross-Pitaevskii simulations and a phenomenological model
based on phase slips indicate that the creation of excitations plays an
important role in the resulting conductivity. Our measurements of resistive
flow elucidate the microscopic origin of the dissipation and pave the way for
more complex atomtronic devices.Comment: Version published in PR
Excited state baryon spectroscopy from lattice QCD
We present a calculation of the Nucleon and Delta excited state spectrum on
dynamical anisotropic clover lattices. A method for operator construction is
introduced that allows for the reliable identification of the continuum spins
of baryon states, overcoming the reduced symmetry of the cubic lattice. Using
this method, we are able to determine a spectrum of single-particle states for
spins up to and including J = 7/2, of both parities, the first time this has
been achieved in a lattice calculation. We find a spectrum of states
identifiable as admixtures of SU(6) x O(3) representations and a counting of
levels that is consistent with the non-relativistic constituent quark
model. This dense spectrum is incompatible with quark-diquark model solutions
to the "missing resonance problem" and shows no signs of parity doubling of
states.Comment: 29 pages, 18 figure
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